Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Abstract. Circularly repeating patches containing sawtooth luminance gradients produce a sensation
of motion when viewed in the periphery. Illusory motion is perceived in a dark-to-light direction,
but only when one's gaze is directed to different locations around the stimulus, a point outside
the display is fixated and the observer blinks, or when the stimulus is sequentially displayed at
different locations whilst the observer fixates one point. We propose that the illusion is produced
by the interaction of three factors: (i) introducing transients as a result of eye movements or
blinks; (ii) differing latencies in the processing of luminance; and (iii) spatiotemporal integration
of the differing luminance signals in the periphery.
About five years ago, one of us, Jocelyn Faubert, observed motion in images such as
that presented in figure la when they were presented in the periphery. When the luminance profile was reversed, as shown in figure lb, the direction of the illusory motion
was also reversed. This motion illusion was not obtained for similar figures having
square-wave or sine-wave luminance profiles. The images were originally presented on
a high-resolution CRT, and the illusion appeared most powerful when the gaze was
directed at an adjacent screen where text was presented. The illusion appeared to be
linked to eye movements.
To investigate the illusion, displays 16 deg in diameter were presented on a CRT
and observers were instructed to gaze at one of four points 23 deg from the centre of
the image, and move their eyes smoothly to the next point clockwise from that point,
continuing to move their eyes around the display for several seconds. The observers
were asked to report what they saw in the figures (similar to those in figures la and lb).
All five observers (including the authors) reported motion in a dark-to-light direction
following a circular path within the display. Counterclockwise eye movements did not
change the direction of perceived illusory motion; rather, the direction of motion was
defined by the direction of the luminance gradient. Observers were also asked to gaze
at one of the fixation points and blink as rapidly as possible. All observers reported
illusory motion in the displays similar to that perceived when moving their gaze from
one fixation point to another. No observer reported the illusion when looking directly
at the display. Although most of the observers (three of five) did not report motion
when first looking at the eccentric fixation points whether moving their eyes or blinking,
all subjects saw the illusion after some time. When the rotation was perceived, the
observers reported a robust sensation of motion.
We recently presented these displays at a conference (Faubert and Herbert 1998)
and only two of over two-hundred observers did not perceive motion in the dark-tolight direction. One observer did not perceive any motion, but felt ill while viewing
the images (a common report after extended viewing of large versions of the stimuli),
and one observer saw motion in the direction opposite to that reported by all other
observers. The remaining observers reported illusory motion in a dark-to-light direction in displays analogous to figures la and lb. Approximately half of the observers
initially reported no motion in the figures, although many of them were not examining
620
J Faubert, A M Herbert
621
different observers ( n = 678). They discussed possible genetic bases for the differences
between observers, but the nature of the illusory motion itself remains unexplained
(Anstis 1986). We propose that our illusion is related to this escalator illusion. In their
stimuli the luminance gradient reverses within a small region in many places, and we
propose that the inconsistency in responses was related to these steps in the displays
rather than genotype. The reversals in the luminance gradient result in changes in the
direction of illusory motion, such that both clockwise and counterclockwise rotation can
be observed in the same figure.
In conclusion, the peripheral-drift illusion is generated by the interaction of three processes: resetting produced by eye movements, blinks, or other transients; temporal-order
effects generated from the luminance inhomogeneities; and spatiotemporal integration
in the visual periphery.
Acknowledgement. This work was supported by NSERC grant OGP0121333 to Jocelyn Faubert.
References
Adelson E H, Bergen J R, 1985 Spatiotemporal energy models for the perception of motion
Journal of the Optical Society of America A 2 284- 299
Anstis S M, 1986 Motion perception in the frontal plane: Sensory aspects, in Handbook of
Perception and Human Performance: Sensory Processes and Perception (Chichester, Sussex:
John Wiley) pp 16.1- 16.27
Faubert J, Herbert A M, 1998A motion illusion in the visual periphery Investigative Ophthalmology
& Visual Science 39(4) Slo74
Fraser A, Wilcox K J, 1979 Perception of illusory movement Nature (London) 281 565 - 566
Gregory R, 1966 Eye and Brain: The Psychology of Seeing (Toronto: World University Library)
Grnau M W von, Saikali Z,Faubert J, 1995 Processing speed in the motion-induction effect
Perception 24 477- 490
Nakayama K, 1985 Biological image motion processing: A review Vision Research 25 625- 660
Parker DM,Salzen E A, 1977 Latency changes in the human visual evoked response to sinusoidal
gratings Vision Research 17 1201 - 1204
Roufs J A, 1963 Perception lag as a function of stimulus luminance Vision Research 3 81 -91
Wilson J A, Anstis S M, 1969 Visual delay as a function of luminance American Journal of
Psychology 82 350- 358